Six killed in Lagos ‘militant’ attack: police

AdminJun 26, 2016

Lagos, June 26, 2016 (AFP)

Six people have been killed in villages on the outskirts of Lagos, police and the state government said on Sunday, blaming “suspected militants” from the Niger Delta.
The Lagos State government said police had started an “aggressive manhunt for suspected militants” after the attacks in the Igbo-Olomu and Ishawo areas of the eastern suburb of Ikorodu on Friday.
“The gunmen, who were alleged to be from the Niger Delta, were said to have come in through the waterways close to the communities and started shooting sporadically,” it added in an emailed statement.
The southern Niger delta region, which produces most of Nigeria’s oil, has been hit since February this year by a string of attacks on pipelines and installations, severely hitting production.
But the Niger Delta Avengers group, which has claimed most of the attacks, has stressed it does not target oil sector personnel, only its infrastructure.
The majority of attacks have also been concentrated in the states of Bayelsa and Delta.
Lagos, in the southwest, only became an oil-producing state in May, when it began production from an offshore field. But Nigeria’s financial hub is criss-crossed by oil and gas pipelines.
Lagos State police commissioner Fatai Owoseni denied some local media reports that as many as 50 people were killed.
“I can confirm that the casualty is six and no family till now has come out even while I was there to say that they have extra corpses,” he told reporters on Saturday.
Owoseni also did not elaborate on what he meant by “suspected militants”, while locals said the villages attacked had been targeted before by oil thieves.
The state government deployed police and soldiers to the location last year because of repeated oil theft from pipelines — or “bunkering” as it is known locally.
Security has been stepped up to prevent attacks using boats via the nearby creeks, he added.